Your Vet May Have a Conflict of Interests (and not even know it)

 
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Your Vet May Have a Conflict of Interests (and not even know it)

Pet healthDuring the past 20 years the veterinary pharmaceutical companies have succeeded in slowly but surely taking over the practise of veterinary medicine.

How’s that?

Here is a shocking article about just how that has been achieved, and how it may well be adversely impacting the health of your dog every time you see your vet. Yes, you read that right – seeing your vet may be harming your dog’s health – simply because vets are now being influenced from the day they enter veterinary school, and on a regular basis in their practices, by veterinary pharmaceutical companies which ostensibly provide “treatments” and “cures” for all manner of ailments that you take your dog to the vet for, but which are solely profit driven and couldn’t care less about dog health at all.

Big Pharma Takes Over Veterinary Medicine; Dogs and Cats Drugged with Chemicals for Profit

Big Pharma has successfully completed its takeover of veterinary medicine in the United States and other first-world nations. Knowing that massive profits could be generated through the bodies of pets, drug companies have spent two decades pursuing an aggressive campaign of rewriting vet school curricula, influencing veterinarians and brainwashing pet owners into thinking their dogs, cats and horses need drugs in order to be healthy. It was an easy sell: Most consumers already demonstrate a cult-like belief in pharmaceutical medicine thanks to a barrage of direct-to-consumer advertising funded by deep-pocketed drug companies, and it was only a minor shift to get them to believe animals need synthetic chemicals in their bodies, too.

So today, the majority of veterinarians in the United States now practice chemical-based medicine on pets. At the first sign of any health symptom, they slap the animal with a prescription for expensive, patented pharmaceuticals. Arthritis, diabetes, heart disease, cancer and even depression are now being treated with dangerous prescription medications. Earlier this year, the FDA gave approval for Prozac, a powerful mind-altering drug, to be prescribed to dogs, and many of the most common drugs for people are now routinely used in pets (including chemotherapy drugs for cancer treatment).

(What’s next, Ritalin for puppies? Ten years ago, it would have seemed absurd to diagnose a dog as suffering from Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, but today, it’s no more insane than the mass diagnosis of human children with this utterly fictitious disease designed to do one thing: Sell profitable amphetamine drugs to children…)

Pet health is now in rapid decline …

The result of all this is that our dogs and cats are sicker than ever. Ask any vet who’s been practicing for more than ten years: They’ve never seen such an increase in the rate of liver disease, nervous system disorders, cancers and diabetes. Ever wonder why? It’s because pets are being routinely poisoned with pet food and pet medicine. Popular anti-flea and anti-tick medications, all by themselves, are so toxic to the liver of any animal that if they were prescribed to humans, their side effects would make the Vioxx fiasco look like a harmless prank.

Pet healthThe idea of actually feeding your dog such high doses of poison that it ends up in the skin tissues where it kills ticks and fleas should be horrifying to any intelligent pet owner, yet most pet owners just buy what their vet tells them to buy, and they feed one chemical after another to their pets, oblivious to the fact that they’re actually poisoning them. (And then they wonder why their animals die of cancer a few years later… gee, didn’t anybody connect the dots here?)

Thanks to Big Pharma influence, veterinary medicine today has become just as much of a joke as the conventional medical system used to treat humans. The goal is no longer to actually heal anyone, but rather to maximize profits by treating and managing diseases without curing or preventing them. Many vets have figured this out, too: If they treat the animals with pharmaceuticals instead of actually curing them of disease (or preventing disease), they benefit from lucrative repeat business! And some of the fees charged by vets now — especially in emergency veterinary care — are just as outrageous as fees charged to sick humans in hospitals. I once spent more than $1,000 for a single day of treatment trying to rescue a sick dog, and half of those fees were for bags of saline solution dripped through an IV. $500 for saline solution? Give me a break. I got ripped off and taken advantage of by a pet care clinic that was exploiting pet emergencies for maximum profits. (There are crooks and dishonest practitioners in the pet care industry just like in the people care industry.)

Holistic animal care practitioners:

It’s not all bad news, though. Fortunately, there are more holistic practitioners in veterinary medicine than in human medicine, and it’s fairly easy to find a holistic vet in any major city if you look around. The holistic veterinarians understand nutrition, herbs, homeopathy and other natural modalities. They prescribe solutions and treat animals in ways that are outlawed in human medicine (because they actually work). If you care at all about the health of your pets, I strongly urge you to seek out and work with a holistic pet care practitioner who avoids prescribing pharmaceuticals. Any veterinarian who thinks Fido is depressed and needs antidepressant drugs should frankly have their licensed stripped away and be banished to some distant, isolated South Pacific island overpopulated with sexually aggressive baboons.

The future looks dim for mainstream pet health …

When you look at the outrageous toxicity of mainstream pet food, and you combine that with the chemical burden of pharmaceutical medicine, the future of health for pets in America looks rather dim. The pet food being sold at stores — even the so-called “scientific” brands — are mostly crap. Only specialty pet food companies offer genuine food. (My favorites are Azmira and The Honest Kitchen ).

The way pets are being treated today by many mainstream veterinarians amounts to nothing less than the chemical abuse of dogs and cats by an industry that has, sadly, exchanged ethics for profits and no longer sees its primary mission as helping improve the quality of life of our animal friends. Personally, I’m outraged by the practice of drugging dogs, cats and other animals with synthetic chemicals to treat degenerative health conditions, and I think those who promote or follow such practices are engaged in extremely unethical, cruel behaviors that should be criminalized. Just like in the human health care system, nutrition has been thrown out the window and is now replaced with a system of chemical invasion that can only lead to a worsening of the long-term health of the animals exposed to such dangerous treatments.

The proper use of pharmaceuticals:

Pet healthSome chemical medicines do have a limited role in quality veterinary care, however. Painkillers have a useful but narrow role. Antibiotics, although they are widely abused, can be helpful in certain limited situations. But treating dogs with antidepressants, chemotherapy, diabetes drugs, statin drugs, osteoporosis drugs and other such chemical agents is patently absurd. Most pet health conditions can be easily prevented or cured with good nutrition, and more challenging health problems can be cheaply and safely solved with herbal therapies and other naturopathic modalities. There is no scientifically justifiable role in veterinary medicine for the majority of the pharmaceuticals now being pushed onto vets, vet techs, and pet owners.

Even the pet shelters are being influenced by Big Pharma. When I rescued my pet from a local animal shelter, I was given a DVD sponsored by a drug company. It offered to teach me about pet behavior while brainwashing me into thinking I needed to give my dog toxic pills for preventing ticks and fleas. As this simple example demonstrates, even the animal shelters are now in bed with Big Pharma. There’s almost no organization in pet health today that hasn’t been taken over (or strongly influenced) by Big Pharma.

It’s not enough to drug all the sick people in the world, you see. Big Pharma has to invent diseases and drug all the healthy people, too. And then, they have to drug all the children and infants to make sure those little beings are set up for future organ failure, which is even more lucrative for the drug companies later on. And just to drive yet more profits home, they’ve got to drug all the animals. Now the cats, dogs, horses, birds, lizards and other animals are no longer safe from the reach of Big Pharma. Drugs are posing a serious chemical threat to the health of pets.

There is almost no living creature left on this planet that hasn’t been considered a potential revenue source by Big Pharma, and if they could make money drugging all the fish in the ocean, you can bet they’d come up with a fictitious fish disease and find a way to drop little fish pills into the oceans of the world. Profit is the purpose. Health is irrelevant. And your precious pet is only seen as a vehicle for generating profits by an industry that has zero compassion for living beings (human, canine, feline or otherwise). There is no effort to protect life. It is only an effort to protect (and expand) profits.

What you can do right now:

If you’re a pet owner, I urge you to do two things right now:

1) Switch to a healthy, natural, holistic pet food. Read the report, Pet Food Ingredients Revealed to learn the truth about pet food ingredients. And make fresh meals from scratch whenever possible. Pets should not be raised to live on processed foods.

2) Fire your drug-pushing vet and switch to a holistic or naturopathic animal care expert, even if they don’t have the same licensing credentials as the drug-pushing vet. State authorities, you see, are trying to de-license naturopathic vets, and there’s a big effort now to push naturopathic vets out of the industry. Sometimes you have to seek them out yourself and ignore state licensing boards (which are totally owned by Big Pharma, by the way). I’ve found that licensing credentials are essentially useless, and the more credentials some vet has, the more deeply they’re brainwashed into a pharmaceutical approach to veterinary medicine.

Pet healthIf you want a healthy pet, you’ve got to get back to basics: Nutrition, exercise, disease prevention and natural remedies for pets. There is absolutely no rationale that justifies the routine chemical treatment of pets with patented, high-profit pharmaceuticals. Mainstream veterinary medicine, as practiced today, is a cruel, exploitive industry that ultimate causes significant harm to the very animals we should be trying to save.

Don’t be suckered by the “miracle pill” sales pitch. Dogs, cats and horses don’t need meds. What they need is great nutrition and medicine from nature.

Just like people.

About the author: Mike Adams is a natural health researcher and author with a passion for teaching people how to improve their health He has authored more than 1,500 articles and dozens of reports, guides and interviews on natural health topics, reaching millions of readers with information that is saving lives and improving personal health around the world. Adams is an honest, independent journalist and accepts no money or commissions on the third-party products he writes about or the companies he promotes. In 2007, Adams launched EcoLEDs, a manufacturer of mercury-free, energy-efficient LED lighting products that save electricity and help prevent global warming. He’s also a successful software entrepreneur, having founded a well known email marketing software company whose technology currently powers the NaturalNews email newsletters. Adams also serves as the executive director of the Consumer Wellness Center, a non-profit consumer protection group, and enjoys outdoor activities, nature photography, Pilates and adult gymnastics. Known on the ‘net as ‘the Health Ranger,’ Adams shares his ethics, mission statements and personal health statistics at www.HealthRanger.org

Reprinted from NaturalNews.com

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About Brigitte Smith

Brigitte Smith is an entrepreneur with a love of dogs and a healthy lifestyle. Brigitte is passionate about holistic health alternatives for dogs, most of which are today suffering foreshortened lifespans in the wake of a lifetime diet of commercial pet food, and further contributed to by unnecessary over-vaccination and chemicals and poisons applied topically and internally. http://HealthierDogs.com is one of Brigitte's sites dedicated to dog health, and in particular dog food reviews.

9 thoughts on “Your Vet May Have a Conflict of Interests (and not even know it)

  1. Noelani

    I’m sorry to say, that I’ve been so naive thinking that drugs could cure my babygirls heart… I should of known better. When I found this web Healthy Happy Dogs. I was too late, I was in fear not knowing how I can save her life that I put her hands in the pharma vets… Just want to share this, cause if I read this 3-5 months ago maybe my Cassi girl would be alive… I just lost her 6 days now. Whoever reads this, believe in the natural way to cure your friend. I wish I did it sooner!

  2. Brigitte Smith

    I’m so sorry to hear of your loss, Noelani.

    You must be devastated by Cassi’s passing.

    I wish you well.

    Thank you so much for sharing your experience with other readers.

    Regards,
    Brigitte

  3. CJ Preston

    YES this is such a great wake up article. Finally the word is getting out and I need to ask permission to print and pass this out to as many people as possible. I am a student of holistic animal care with Clayton College of Natural Health and working on startig a business based on educatiing folks about nutrition for their pets and the alternative herbal tx available.
    Thank you!!
    Cindy J Preston

  4. Brigitte Smith

    Hi Cindy,

    I couldn’t have said it better myself!

    I’ve emailed you about the permission to reprint.

    Good luck with your new venture.

    Regards,
    Brigitte

  5. May

    Noelani I’m so sorry for the pain you are feeling. I was there myself 9 months ago and it is such a bitter loss.

    I lost my last dog to Cushings Disease, aged only 8 years. I’d done all the ‘right things’ – worm treatments, heart worm tablets, flea prevention tablets. I trusted the ‘professional, educated opinion’ of my vet and will forever feel upset that I ignorantly poisoned one who adored me and trusted me for her every need.

    We have a new dog now – a rescued Cavalier King Charles x Papillon who was only 7 months old when we got her. She’d been sent to the vet to be put down because she was too active! We have her on a natural diet and no chemicals or vet visits.

    Brigitte, when will your natural heart worm prevention be back in stock please?

    All the best,
    May

  6. Brigitte Smith

    Hello May,

    Thanks for leaving those comforting words for Noelani, and sorry to hear of your experience which, sadly, is all too common these days – dogs passing away much too young.

    As for the all-natural heartworm prevention, you can order it here.

    Or if you were looking for details of the herbal heartworm prevention regime, it’s here.

    Regards,
    Brigitte

  7. Pauline Freed

    I’m delighted to learn of you. My min poodle has diabeties and on insulin. I am feeding him only breast chicken, green vegies and poached eggs and fish, nonfat cheese. Any suggestions?

  8. Brigitte Smith

    Hi Pauline,

    You’re definitely on the right track with your poodle. I’m not sure about the cheese – a small amount of cottage cheese is very good, especially if combined with a little flaxseed oil.

    There is a natural Diabetes remedy for pets you might want to look at. Do NOT discontinue the insulin, though – talk to your vet if you want to do that. The natural remedies can be used along with the conventional medications. Sometimes the conventional medications can be reduced or even eliminated, but ONLY in consultation with your vet, and it is NOT always possible to do so at all.

    (Please note that I am not a vet and I have no veterinary training whatseover. I speak only from my own very limited experience as a dog owner like yourself.)

    Regards,
    Brigitte

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